How to find out a IP address via email

Log into your Hotmail/Windows Live account with your username and password.

Click on the Inbox link on the left.

Under the column that says "Sort by", find the email that you want to track and right-click on it. You should get a menu that has something like Mark as read, Mark as unread, and so on. The last option in the menu should be View message source. Select it.

You should see the email headers now.

You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process. Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to step 6.

If you find a header with X-Originating-IP: followed by an IP address, that is the sender's IP address

If that doesn't work, look for Received: from followed by IP address within square brackets[].

* If you have multiple Received: from headers, eliminate the ones that have proxy.anyknownserver.com.

Track the IP address of the sender

Here is where you can do it if you are working from yahoo

Log into your Yahoo! mail with your username and password.

Click on Inbox or whichever folder you have stored your mail.

Click on the Subject of the email you want to track and right-click. You should get a menu like this.

You may copy the headers and use my IP address detection script to ease the process. Or if you want to manually find the IP address, proceed to the next step.

Look for Received: from followed by the IP address between square brackets [ ].That should most likely be the IP address of the sender.If there are many instances of Received: from with the IP address, select the IP address in the last pattern. If there are no instances of Received: from with the IP address, select the first IP address in X-Originating-IP.

Track the IP address of the sender

I can't do that to L since he doesn't send me emails but someone might be able to do that

So anyone who gets an email from L try that and let me know of the IP address and then from there we might be able to contact his ISP provider and get his internet permanently taken down.

Hope this helps anyone who wishes to contact a ISP provider. First you need to know IP and after that it's easy to contact the provider